Ludmilla Assing was the second daughter of author
Rosa Maria Varnhagen and
David Assur Assing, a physician from
Königsberg. Her elder sister
Ottilie Assing was a feminist author and
abolitionist activist. David Assing converted to
Lutheranism so he could marry Ludmilla's mother, Rosa Maria Assing — although, for the sake of mutuality, the family moved into a Jewish neighbourhood where Assing would feel more comfortable. Ludmilla's parents were liberal intellectuals and held
cultural salons attended by authors and thinkers including
Heinrich Heine,
Friedrich Hebbel,
Karl Gutzkow and poets of the
Young Germany (
Junges Deutschland) movement. After the death of her parents she moved to Berlin to live with her uncle, author
Karl August Varnhagen von Ense, Ludmilla's mother's younger brother. As well as conversing about politics, she made accomplished pastel portraits of Varnhagen's visitors including
Gottfried Keller, with whom she corresponded for many years. Her sister Ottilie left home after an argument and later emigrated to the US. by Ludmila Assing On her uncle's death in 1858 Ludmilla inherited his collection of documents. She prepared the scandalous letters of
Alexander von Humboldt for publication in 1869 and Varnhagen's diaries which appeared in print from 1862 to 1870 in 14 volumes. This brought her worldwide fame but also into conflict with the authorities.
Otto von Bismarck ordered that the diaries covering the year 1848 be seized, and forbade their publisher
Brockhaus from distributing them. Assing fled to Florence in Italy and continued her activities as an author and editor. She joined the left wing of the
Risorgimento movement to unify Italy and wrote about politics in Italian and German for periodicals in each country as well as translating Italian texts into German. Ludmilla Assing's friends included
Ferdinand Lassalle,
Georg and
Emma Herwegh,
Hedwig Dohm and
Hermann, Fürst von Pückler-Muskau. After Pückler's death she wrote his biography and prepared his unpublished literary works for print. Assing died of
meningitis in a Florence hospital in 1880. ==Private life==